This project will restore degraded salmonid spawning habitat, improve stream complexity and recover and restore rearing habitat on 0.4 miles of the Amboy to Yacolt reach of Cedar Creek, a tributary of the North Fork of the Lewis River in Clark County. According to the draft WRIA 27 Limiting Factors Report: The Cedar Creek watershed provides the majority of spawning and rearing habitat left for all species of anadromous fish in the NF Lewis River system. Present in the Cedar Creek system are Chinook and steelhead (threatened); coho -(candidate for listing as threatened) and Cutthroat (proposed for listing). The draft WRIA 27 Liminting Factors Report and the Lower Columbia Steelhead Conservation Initiative both identify the system as sanctuary habitat in need of protection and restoration. The subject properties have historically provided excellent spawning and rearing habitat that has become seriously degraded due to past removal of most large woody debris. The removal has resulted in loss of stream complexity, spawning gravel locked up in a mix of cobble and substrate fines, and loss of access to high quality rearing habitat. This project will continue work done in 1999 (Phase 1) of the project by developing in-stream spawning beds anchored by large rock vanes, adding root wads and other LWD and recovering lost rearing areas.